I think this guy may have been a dog in his last life, and the description of Buck and Spitz's duel is too real. The feeling of tight muscles, the feeling of tearing skin, the cold and pain of teeth and teeth bumping together... And as a human, the only scene where teeth touch teeth is probably kissing. If Jack London wasn't a dog, how could he write so well about the feeling of banging teeth in a fight! Buck learned the law of sticks and teeth as a pet dog, evoked wildness by the wilds of Alaska, and learned true love, and finally became a legendary magic wolf. I feel that Buck, who finally became the "Magic Wolf", is no longer a dog, but also not a wolf. He no longer desires and looks up to human civilization and comfort, and at the same time transcends the cruel laws of animal teeth and sticks. Become a real god who can do whatever he wants. Buck doesn't need to learn from people or wolves, but people should learn from Buck how to fight with fate, and then master fate and gain real freedom. My expectation for the movie version of "The Call of the Wild" is to see the wilderness of Alaska. Many people have misunderstandings about the wilderness, thinking that the wilderness is beauty, but when you are in it, in addition to feeling the beauty, there are also the cruelty of nature and the beauty of life. Fragile. I'm looking forward to seeing Buck's best friend "Curly" on the sled team being torn apart by huskies; I'd also like to see Dave left in the moor to die from a serious injury... There are none of these cruel moments. Buck is not stupid either, he deliberately provoked a duel with Spitz and became the head dog, but he still couldn't escape the fate of living under the whip of his master. People give him a little more dried fish, make leather shoes for him, and even massage his feet. Buck knows that people are doing this for profit, and in essence, he is no different from Dave who was eliminated. You are awesome, you can be a dog or even a wolf, but can you be a master? No matter how good a dog is, it can't become a human. A dog must face the dog's problems and the dog's fate. The dog will eventually return to nature at the moment of death, but if it returns to nature, the dog will no longer be a dog, a wolf, or a beast. Buck's answer to fate. "The Call of the Wild" is a bit of a cruel dog story, but cruelty is the background color of Jack London's works. When the background color is removed and only the tenderness is left, then this is no longer Jack London's novel. Disney, you are adapting "The Call of the Wild", you can't follow "The Call of the Wild" in the same way as "The Lady and the Rogue"! In the end, he really dared the whole little white wolf to seduce Buck, is this Nima a call of the wild or a call of reproduction! Now some companies advocate a wolf culture. I wonder if these bosses have watched "The Call of the Wild". Can you manage them all? Jack London also has a novel "Love Life" in which the dude kills the wolf at the end. This story tells us, what wolf and dog, don't talk about useless, people are the most awesome. The wolf is so arrogant, why is the boss of your company still a human? Ah, maybe he's not human.
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